The Socialist

The Socialist 7 October 2009

Needed a party for workers, not bosses

Needed a party for workers, not bosses


Afghanistan stop the war

Afghanistan - Bring the troops home now


Youth Fight for Jobs

University accommodation scandal: Students must defend rights

University freshers fairs: Students seek out socialism


Wirral anti-cuts victory: 'If you fight, you can win'

Young parents need support, not attacks

Fight for a living wage

Not to Darling's pay freeze

Fast news

Campaign forces health Trust to save Crowlin House


An autumn of discontent in South Yorkshire

Leeds council calls for talks with unions

Fighting against outsourcing, defending working conditions at British Telecom

NUT vice president: Elect Martin Powell-Davies

Cambridge post workers strike

North Wales shop stewards network


Social care in crisis


Ireland: Lisbon Treaty vote is not an endorsement for hated government

Portugal: Voters turn to the left

Foreign aid - chaining the world to capitalism

Fish Tank directed by Andrea Arnold

I speak Fula by Bassekou Kouyate and Ngoni Ba

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/596/8215

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 7 October 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Fight for a living wage

TO MARK ten years of the national minimum wage, the New Labour government has given it the lowest increase on record, taking the full adult rate to a miserly £5.80 an hour.

Bob Severn

This 1.2% rise from £5.73 an hour was introduced on 1 October 2009, along with an improvement from £4.77 to £4.83 for workers aged 18-21 and from £3.53 to £3.57 for those aged 16-17. The government has also promised that the full adult rate will count for 21 year olds from October 2010 - but will the next government keep that promise?

These measly increases were first announced in May, when consumer price index (CPI) inflation was 2.9%. The CPI seemed to be the government's preferred inflation measurement, until the Retail Price Index (RPI), which includes mortgage costs, dived below 0% as a result of the recession.

When the minimum wage was first introduced in April 1999 the adult rate was £3.60 an hour. While, since then, it has increased by 61% compared to inflation of around 30%, the current rate does not match the £6.88 an hour needed by a single adult working full-time according to the minimum income standard (MIS) published by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation in July 2008.

George Bain, chair of the Low Pay Commission (LPC), which recommends the annual increase to the government, said: "We believe that [our] recommendations are appropriate for this economic climate."

Big businesses, including their representatives in government, are using the recession as an excuse to keep down workers' pay while protecting profits.

New Labour brought in the minimum wage as part of its 'welfare to work' programme to 'make work pay'. This programme has resulted in continued attacks on benefits, 'making people work for very little pay'. Now the Tories have announced that they will make people who are claiming unemployment benefit for six months do work experience to continue receiving their benefit.

Trade Union Congress general secretary Brendan Barber has stated that "the LPC must be much more generous when the economy recovers". The Socialist Party demands that trade union struggle is needed to establish a minimum wage of £8 an hour for all ages with no exemptions, as a step towards £10 an hour so that all workers can enjoy decent living standards.


In this issue

Needed a party for workers, not bosses


War and occupation

Afghanistan stop the war

Afghanistan - Bring the troops home now


Youth fight for jobs

Youth Fight for Jobs

University accommodation scandal: Students must defend rights

University freshers fairs: Students seek out socialism


Socialist Party news and analysis

Wirral anti-cuts victory: 'If you fight, you can win'

Young parents need support, not attacks

Fight for a living wage

Not to Darling's pay freeze

Fast news

Campaign forces health Trust to save Crowlin House


Workplace news and analysis

An autumn of discontent in South Yorkshire

Leeds council calls for talks with unions

Fighting against outsourcing, defending working conditions at British Telecom

NUT vice president: Elect Martin Powell-Davies

Cambridge post workers strike

North Wales shop stewards network


Socialist Party feature

Social care in crisis


International socialist news and analysis

Ireland: Lisbon Treaty vote is not an endorsement for hated government

Portugal: Voters turn to the left

Foreign aid - chaining the world to capitalism

Fish Tank directed by Andrea Arnold

I speak Fula by Bassekou Kouyate and Ngoni Ba


 

Home   |   The Socialist 7 October 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Minimum wage:

triangleThem & Us

triangleOur Demands

triangleMass anger forces more companies to abandon workfare schemes

triangleJarrow marchers put forward an alternative

triangleLow pay, no way!

triangleDanger: young people's futures at risk

Pay:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

Inflation:

trianglePensions inflation-link case in court on Monday

triangleStop the government austerity juggernaut

triangle'In reality, Britain is facing a savage economic ice age'

Labour:

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleBuilding the electoral alternative in Brent